Mountains and fields
Mishan genye, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin means m í sh ā ng è NY ě. From Rong Zhai's Essays: Wang Rui's cuckoo.
Idioms and allusions
[source] in Song Hongmai's Rong Zhai essays Wang Rui's azalea, it is said that "the two flowers lie in the mountains of the east of the Yangtze River, almost similar to hazelnut." [example] the first volume of Shengwu Ji written by Wei Yuan of Qing Dynasty: "the soldiers of the Ming Dynasty went through the mountains, fought and walked, and all the soldiers of the six towns broke into Xingshan."
Discrimination of words
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial to describe people, animals and plants. Combined idiom
Mountains and fields
To recruit talents and make use of their abilities - jìn xián yòng néng
the truth about a person or a matter - lú shān zhēn miàn
rush about telling the news around spreading - bēn zǒu xiāng gào
eat and drink to the limit of one 's capacity - jiǔ zuì fàn bǎo
Take advantage of the opportunity - lǚ jī chéng biàn